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<? flip ivi it r m cgt v \ mr 4 j t>l v salisbury ntc7mai~liri870 - xr 10 1870 l?Â»to at ure hopes for â€¢ arlotte x c i rsult op ax establish i â€¢â– ' 'â– â– -..â€¢.._-. ther -.\ ith a creasing capital gives ns i . 'â– â– â– r facilities to offer greater t â– r i'li'tfliiii b.-.tb whole il i i hi 'â€¢â€¢â€¢ thi - m itice is wor ' ' . â€¢â– i â– ; n of all we are â– â€¢â– â– ' e purchases hich ow icrease r b iness â– - '. â– ' 27 â€¢-â– '.'. a ' â– , to buy mtity ' : â€¢ icturers 1 .,â– â– â– -â– â– dou ii cent i ..' â€¢ it gives â€¢ the li a c * :: stock â€¢ " bv theloth i - i classes of ; â€¢ â– vholesal ' â– â€¢ ' ch we in i e , irket to pur e on their u ay ; â– other -' â€¢ â– : will be â– ast viz : . .' i Â«' imretn i â€¢:; . - i 'â€¢' â– isitk in goods deparlment g department â– â– ' ; '.. :â– â€¢â– the most 1 c.j v liliubj e cl'.im t hats | "â– 'â– ''â€¢â– klvn a ucti i - â– lldi v . .. . , . , â– ' â– â€¢ â€¢ ' .'â€¢ rv v â– â– 1 u v â€¢ â– â– i . , , -Â» , -, j n e ilicr ; ; .': â– i ? \ ' . .' ,â™¦ * â€¢ ' city i ' a - iyy npnarfmf ' ! ... - â€” i ~* ._..- ivall .-',-â€¢ â– ,â– :â– !. \ i'sy \ '.:.'â– â€¢â– "- is wi k-ly . i â– ' 1iixtels . .:!.â€¢ . : ;:. n c . <-â– â– lj li j uui in cticut mutual 3tin run gest as u'alviku . a sf tl $ ja i j a Â«Â£Â» 3 â– â– . raosftxjixj wait â– ' â€¢ rs .. â€¢ â– : v a rft â€” ! .' ' ' * -' ' â– i : - n â€¢â€¢ 1 if . â– i -â€¢ . n tl .,.'â€¢...' i'ol'l ... ictive '-'â€¢â– . 1 hi â€¢. . â– â€¢ â€¢; i ' - 1001 i . . ' - * - â€¢ i -â€¢ .. â€¢ -â– ' â– â€¢ â– â– --' :â€¢â€¢ 33 lbs : â€¢ â– ..;' j â€¢ â– ' ' â– â€¢ ' ' ' .' : / " ! x^ioxhousej ( :; a v lott b n c thi 'â– â– â€¢â€¢.] i ing been ivvi.v j in evi rv !< ; r -- pen for 1 1 lati . :' â€¢ a , - - a -Â» , ' r r â€¢ t , . i ; i ? - Â» - a , ." ' â€¢".Â« â– : ' ii ('. . â– ;. -..â– ' mrs henry w miuer's ; 13 v<lm<r house ' â– " :\ v person i v -. . ileicrh i c f*jui tf oi,t:.i , l i.'oytjiiirn 186 j tijc did xort state published weekly hy editor and proprietor bates of mbiuii'iiox oxe year payable in advance 3.00 sis months " â€¢â€¢ i o j ."> copii - i one address 1 2 5(1 1 iu c.'.mie to headdress m.00 j liatc-i ot advertittsvnq . â€” ones piare ! ; rs insertion si ob i or each additi ual insertion i Â» special notices will be charged a per rent '.' â€¢ er than the abo e r.ii courl and justice's < rders will be publish ed al the same rates with other advertise in en t s . obituary notices over six lines charged asad ertist m tits con rract rates space Â§ t gj s .".' . [ i i 1 square u 50 ;<; 75 5 00 3 50 1300 2 squares 150 0 25 8 50 13 00 22.00 'â– 'â– â€¢ uares 1 0 if 00 1 2 00 jo 00 30 00 -! squares - 00 1 1 00 15 00 25 00 37,50 1 column i 1 00 10 d 1 ) jit 00 :'.<> 00 45.00 i 18 00 2-1 00 30 uti 5 00 75.00 ' ( u 28 00 10 00 50 00 80 00 130,00 : rhe old south state yadkin college x ('.. i \ may 4th 1870 \ d r li if â– 'â– : may you bt pleased to allow me ::. ;. t ur t olumns a shoi ; sp ice iu order 'â€¢ " give you a s nop is or rather the hii i of 1 he ren interesting and highly en ; ti rtainhig singing school (' lebration which came i fat muddy creek church on the 30th i our correspondent having secured a ia invil tion to attend had endeavored to make even arrangement accordingly but : â– doi imed t tli ppoini nn nt ! when 'â– â– i tit taii ing poinl for thai pla c was no ! ' i to 1 ravel in an opp itt dircctii a '. â€” j â– â€¢ i ' â– â– it ine sin i uccecdcd in get â– ' i to gath â€¢ ! in general news in : * â€¢ \ " ! - according to the occasion a mani ition ol i - int rii â€¢. 1 '< ir st ime nt ipular ' â– â€¢ ; of tin state i i i'i tlien :'â– ire al i tvo r â€¢ i -.. and i he 'â€¢< lid xorl li ; ' i â€¢;â€¢ ' - most merit orii iu â€¢ fiy-t jt -' n's itself so wi â– â– trust ing mr e lit . â€¢;â– . to ;â– ur gi i rosit for niueli and to \ onr for i irance tor more fn n 30 unl i 9.30 continuous crowds of men women and chil drcn were - â€¢ n hocking l i the church each i vi ing with the other in â€¢ â– '. incing the di ci inter the exerc.i es were inangura !â€¢'! b an ad iress by mr eiii â€¢ of da ie ( o ' d rep : d to have 1 teen an alee euri '! ' 'â– â– [ uen 1 i libit at the close of i . â– ellis ri mai ks o lu rs were e db 1 ; > the . ! i was v e uns ill : ie i â– v ia f of yadkii \ i lage who i c i tit space of thirty live mint ites n on or less tin re he ood i niinutive 1 â– . ling a iapo 1 : :â€¢ form p . : in - inn etry a hand d the pres nee of brain a conn bespt ike i rare intc ligence ' i ' said t let he ap]Â»eared to all v hai he re | â– natural oral or â€” vs i h a voi -â– of re â– -â€¢ r a . d â– â– npa -. the first toni * of ; '"â– ed to iii the tl dred emotions â– ;. lb adopti tl the style which is triy hi o n i rse md forcible as ian j .. ag c ii be ma le a d ' : \ e y quick ener i . : i id and impres dve li r oi â€¢ of his age 1 i i â– .â– lit ul i.i ir nice bo ish tone . ir distil t thrilling ul teranc ; ni grace i : . ' : m bold expressions unparalleh d en and manly -â– . r n *>, h ri etted the atten of 1 te entire aud ence who seemed un , to lo it ingle -â€¢ i lable falling thus .' :â€¢â€¢ : 1 1 ivoni such youthful lips â€” expressions i . . ! â€¢ i along upon the tide of his imp mi <: eloquence liki a feal her on the mi of a cataract when he had closed his remarks when his voice was no longer it '.. and his . rm had disappeared in the : 1 tli p stood still in silent admi i in as il awetj bv the perfect success "!' one so ; om â– n liile the count i nance of some i iml ti a a mighty big speech for such i i ". sic t iii tjloria m u udi anions â– â€¢!::â€¢ mr mentionables was onr i .' v i !!. thos i v hio va ' tore p pular in the r iprocal than the oratorical uuch as il was whispered among daughters of mother iv c t hat n hilc v i '.". had -.!â€¢.â– '.',' profound esteem and ad j miration as an orator that mr ].. had won ' " - as a com ting man w ll k to your suits friend thomas bul re member you are to keep oul of davie coun al 1 o"i lock was made the announci nn n1 i ii mier at th appoint d rendezvous be ll th sha le tn es wer â– found eatables a ing a th â– subsrantials and luxuries ppetite i ouid sngge-t provid d with - j fusion apjiroai liing t xtnn a mce a r d ing ample justice to the re j 'â– â– -:. tin . fell back ia pei feci order to 1 h ir original posish 1 when the vocalists re sounded the melody cf tho dear old fa miliar rain christian's prospect "(>!-! â– â– '.- ;. ."' etc : my reporter says he lefl the gay ami joy ous si â€¢ ne al a late hour minus appetite and h-at fet ling only a d ttenn 3 nation to bask a - â€¢ ' : '" the smiies of a certain fair one and proffering her the opportunity <.;' becoming i â– â– in a n a blc time would m ,' : - â– â€¢â– tiui i dmil itei lizing i irtii dars i'd ll row m self on j our mi rcy aad sue for : ' â€¢â– â– " â– yet a w hilc longi r nor omil f oth â– i . : :.:- i mu h de in ;, refer you ''â€¢: bul again u so mote il be apologies being very rarely in good taste and never ; '; â€¢ ; i ! ''â€¢ ' propose to ii ard them exclu x ' ly exci \, .'â– :::: one lor the authenticity i-'i my assertions for my lnformanl is i very - â€¢' 'â€¢ â– ;â€¢ : dead in love bul very happv â€” al ing 1 now and most ge i rallv that : ' â€¢ ' 'â– â– 'â– â– tmn 8 i-ake bake a hoe cake â€” j '-' he '- a â– kid a i pretty man and i trust will be exi â– ' 'â– .â– â– 'â– - .' -.':â€¢. hop ig again lo iii some vacant conn r f your valued t aper i beg leave to subs :; myself ' thine for th â€¢ right yapiun bi rgeb then are one hundred aad forty-six dif ! f Â« nt religious denominations in great brit ain i from the wilmington journal john pool th record of a renegead â€” the slander of a son â€” extract from the speech of senator pool * * * * * # * men are murdered from motives of re venge from sudden ebullitions of passion murdered for the tiaoe of gain j3Â«\en have ast,a'u'its and batteries committed upon their | person : their property is destroyed the i riminal luws are violated from various mo ' tives that actuate the bad and the evil-dis posed citizens of the community this is one thing i understann that such offenses are committed even where and i stand up ' iiere to day to say that in the state of north carolina there are fewer such offenses now than there were before the war a stranger or < itizen if you please may travel from the sea board to the mountains in my state with j :;- much security as he could before the war provided always he does not allow his po litical notion to be obtruded upon those whom he meets take the political aspect out and there is no danger whatever i will go further than that being a practicing lawyer in thai state i say that i feel sure ii the opinion i express that there are fewer i violations ofthe criminal laws of the state now than there ever have been during the course of my professional life and experience there 1 will go still further and say that the courts of justice an the officers of law punish offenders as promptly pursue them a promptly ferret out offenses as promtlyin that state now as they ever did and that our courts are as careful and as prom jit and as rigid in the execution of criminal laws as ihey ever were upon ail classes of offenses thai are not political llu ku k'iiv business means something it i for a purpose 1 tun not standing here to say whethere has been an exaggeration of the outrages alleged to have been commit ted by the organization or whether there has been a failure to bring before ihe sen ate m:e half of what hasactually been done ! leave all that out of the question sir the meaning of it i thai the reconstruction pol icy of congress i not in accordance with the sent iuienl ofthe majority of the white i : â– '''.'â– in thai community the meaning is tint a majority ofthe whitepeopleintho.se states have heretofore controlled their gov ernments and ruled them and they intend thai the same shall be the case hereafter they mean thu the provisions of the fif teenth amendment which were put upon ili.i.-e states l.i tin reconstruction acts li â– ;'â– re lie fifteenth amendment Â«-Â«Â» nrtopf.-ef shall be in effect nothing that they will substitute a higher law than yur reconsl ruc tion p ilicy and the fifteenth amendment to i wi violence in the localities | now mr president i ask whether it is iikely to succeed .' take any community in | which those outrages have been committed and arc being continued where bands of men in horrid disguises and going under all the horrid and fearful names which were mentioned hereby the senator from indiana â€¢ '. . tcrday can with impunity so far as the law is concerned or tlie administrations of the law by its officers go to the houses of col eed men a1 the dead hours of night take them out and hang them or scourge them bum down their houses outrage their fami lies in a community where this is continu ed not for one week but for months and months v her â€¢ th'-re is no arresting ofthe offenders and i is made perfectly plain that there is im security save one and that secu rity i announced by these marauders and it is to vote ihe democratic ticket or not vote al all â€” 1 ask whether voting could be free in such a community : 1 is known thai there is a security against outrage there i one thing v hich being agreed to no man fears to be ku kluxed and thai is that he is right politically in the estimation of those who conduct these outrages the law and the officers of the law give no security at all these men are seen in their disguise ; the men whom they hang up are seen hung up the men whom shey scourge exhibit the effecl - of their stripes upon their backs and no o seer of the law raises his hand â€” evi ry man feels and knows that the law is utterly powerless to give him any protec tion yet he is offered protection if lie will abandon the civil and political right which you have thru upon him and sir he is ubjcct â€¢! lo these outrages be rauseyou have thrust th ti upon him the meaning is that the majority of the white people in tho^e state ne an to control the government as in times past the fifteenth amendment and \" ir laws under ii to the contrary notwith standing * * * * but you say call out the militia whom will you call '. you must not have members of this organization in your militia if you do it is of no effect at all will you put democrats in it in whose interests these outrages are committed ? that would not be considered very safe you call out a militia then composed of republicans a ri publican militia you must not call them from the county in which the outrages are committed for if you do every man upon thai militia a soon as il is disbanded will bite the dust you must go to another county aud call upon the republicans of some distant county to do what ? to o-o into the insurrectionary locality and tndit democrats sir is not that party arrayed against party in arms ? * * * * at but mr president suppose you can take your militia out of the county without a fight and carry them into the insurrectionary dis * riot when your militia g r there what is it going to do â– : at besl it is but a possee for the sheriff but one of the precautions visu ally taken by thi e organizations is that the have the sheriff andlnis deputies as well as other officers ofthe b*w by some means and ' if by ao other bj intimidation if not iuth'-ir interest at least winking t their proceed ings : and you carry your militia from c dis tanf county to act aa a possee to officer whose duty it v a 1 > sun>inon n posse ofthe ci izens : i se are order and who have nt gle ted their duty and that is all the effi cacy of the militia after they get there bat sir supposi they are efficacious what are they to do you say arrest some of thes violators of law suppose you can find one and you arrest him what will vou do i with him put him in prison why sir the prison would be broken open just as soon as thai militia force turn its back upon the house bui suppose you retain him iu pris . - â€” t^^^^aa^abaaum aa on do not he and his friends know that there are nine chances tjf one that some of his confederates will be on the grand jurv ami no true bill found but suppose a true bill is found as the re sult of your militia operation against one of these offenders i am informed it has trans pired in our state that when one of these men was upon trial before a petit jury it was found that in the endorsement on the bill of a true bill the word t % t jfc had been prefix ed bv-aqpsebody tso th^p lead not a true bill and they were tryirg a man upon no bill at all i simply state this to show the subterfuges that are resorted to to evade the law but sir if you bring that offender before a petit jury you are bringing him before a petit jury composed of some men who have sworn in the most solemn manner and are bound by the most horrid obligations one to the other to acquit him i cannot see how the militia under the circumstances would be a remedy at all ******** * the addition which the senator from mis souri proposes to make to existing laws on this subject is to allow the president in in surrectionary localities to suspend the habeas corpus and declare martial law another feature is that he allow the levying of con tributions upon the citizen of that locality to pay the expenses of the operation i have already said that when the state sent the militia there they would but be a posse of the sherill and i say now under existing laws if you send the existing force ofthe united states there when they arrive in the county they are but a pone of the sheriff if they arresl a man what will they do with him ': they must turn lrm over to the civil authority but sir the people of those communities have learned by experience to respect the strong arm of the government ofthe united states and they have leaned to know that martial law declared is something that can not be succesfully and safely evaded for it is evasion not resistance that is the founda tion ofthe hopes of those men whoarecrea ! ting these disturbances the efficacy of the . proposed law consists in the feature that the writ of habeas corpus may lie suspended and that when the military authorities make ar rests they shall not be compelled to turn the offender over to the civil authorities to be tried by a jury of his own confederates i ; would not aii iw tin president to suspend the i writ of halms copus in a whole state i j would confine it as the sen tor from missou ri dots to the insurrectionary locality i do not know that any i of the union has 'â– . been violated in tlie state ofk,,rth carolina bv ,!,<.â– .â€¢ k.i lclnx they m ..Â» __â€ž.!,.,- i:j . and inefficient in ii operation the provisions of the fifteenth amendment but it i done in an i indirect way they do nol say you shall not \ cane to the ballot-box and vote if they did j they would then be violating a law of tlie union j they do not stand around the ballot-box and j say because yon are black yoi shad not vote here if so possibly they might be violating the fifteenth amendment ofthe constitution but ! i doubt whether thev would i have not the | fifteenth amendment before me but i think it provides that no state shall debar a man from the right to vote because nf his race color or previous condition and even standing at the ballot-box and keeping colored men away by force would hardly be a violation ofthe laws of the union they have not done that that is not the purpose the purpose is lo make ii un safe by terrorism and intimidation to prevent i his exercising the right it may be said that you can pass a law here to enforce the fifteenth amendment and make it a law of the united and have any violation of it indicted before the courts of the united states where men may be tried by an iron-clad jury as the expression is down in those stales perhaps | that would he very well that may be one of the reni'die which may he adopted in part in ! thi ease 1 think it is it is indispensable but \ it still has the defect that oilier propositions i have it can be evaded and will be evaded un j der the carefully prepared and constructed or ; ganization which is denominated on this floor the ku-klux **â– ***â€¢** mr president thi ku-klux organization of whieh you have heard is riot an insurrection 1 { admit it has been declared so in one locality by j the ' governor of my own state but it is a mis j understanding of terms an insurrection is open j and active resistance to onr authority it is not j a rebellion that is an effort to break down an existing government and set up another in its j place they do not propose to resist establish j ed authority they are not engaged just at this j time however much thev might like to be in a i rebellion against the government ofthe united states they do not propose to resist the con j stituted authority of tiie state they propose to j evade it they propose bv an organization here ! and there by the number of its members and j by the oaths and obligations by which they are bound one to another to srrcen each other and i evade the authority ofthe state that is to per ; petuate with impunity domestic violence within i the borders of a state and to defy that state to j prevent it does not that raise a case when the j united states should go th-re aud intervene with i authority ami stop ii thatis the view which i have ofthe situation but idonotthink it is necessary to labor up it further * ' * * # * some senators may say get up a fight and ihen the government may go in sdr a re gard for the peace of diis country a regard for its order for its character a regard for human i life the highest dictates oi humanity as well as j the express mandates of the constitrtlon it seems ' to me makes it obligatory upon the united ! states to interfere in time in seme efficient way j i have no doubt that whenever it is inown and i settled by stringent legislation here that there j is to be such intprfereiiee aa i indicated by the amendment of the senator from missouri you j will not haveto execute thatlaw in haifa doze ' cases whenever under mania law thepeipe â– tratore of the.se outrages aw in one or two in stances taken up and punished as they deserve ' to be nd aa every m ' cght to hope t f Â» sea i them punished it v il he understood quickly j from one end ofthe organization to the other tend the word will be disband and you v ill ave an infinite a'-iount of uirbulaicv aid trou ble i appeal to con.-'re to pass such a measure not only in behalf of the law-abiding law-lov ; im and peaceable citizens of those communi \ ties but ir the iateresta ofthe whole communi : ty ; in the iateresta ol toe very men who ie j encouraging or perpetrating these outrages _ jk we speak e,-il of others ; . n d should we j not fear the evil they may say of us \ speak of no neighbor if thou woulclsl not herwhat ! will trouble thee j ! charms strike the sight but merit wins ; the aioul j burning of tiie richmond thea tre in connection with the late awful acci dent in richmond the following account of the burning of the theatre of that city in december 1811 taken from hbwison's his tory of virginia will vve trust prove of in terest to our readers : * j it is not often that a domestic calamity is so mortal in its character and so wide spread in its influence as to merit a place in i general history but one now presents itself which has formed an era in the life ofvir ginia never to be forgotten 1811 dur i ing the winter of this yea unwonted gaie 1 ty prevailed in richmond brilliant assem blies followed each other in quick succes sion the theatre was opened and sustained by uncommon histrionic taleul ; the fasci nations of the season had drawn together from every part ofthe stat . the young the beautiful the gay on thursday night the 26th of december the theatre was crowded t excess , hundred persons had assem bled within it embracing the fashion the wealth and the honor ofthe stale a new drama was to be presented for the benefh oi placide a favorite actor and it was to be followed by the pantomime of th bleeding nun the wild legend on whi h thi spectacle was founded had lost none of its powei underthe pen of monk lewis and even in pantomime it had awakened greal interest the regular nice had bt en play ed : the pantomime had commenced al ready the curtain had risen upon its second act when pari of fire were seen to fall from the scenery on the back pan of thi i stage a moment after mr robi rtson one â€¢ of the actors ran forward and waving his hand toward the c iling called aloud â– â€¢'; h house i on fire 1 lis voice carried a thrill of horror through tin assembly all rose and press tl for the doors of the building il spectators in the pit escaped with out difficulty ; the passage leading from i to the tiie exit was broad and had those j in tin b txes d s ended bv the oillars manv ' would have been saved some vi:o were thrown down by violence were thus pre served bul the crowd from the boxes i pressed into the lobbies and i was hi re among the refined and the h ely thai ihe sc ne became most appalling the bull din : va oou wrapped ' in fi tmes volumes t â€¢' thick black vapor penetrated every part i and produced suffocation the lire approach ; ed caughl those mare to it piercing shrieks rose above the sound of a mn - of human b he - tru<rgling ibr life tfee-wcals Â«â– Â«â€¢Â«-<â€¢ i . n..i],i . a unhcr prx t and -:â– â– â– â– '.> s men ' frantic with fear passed over the heads of i i before them in their wav towards the doors or windows ofthe thea'tre tlie win dows even of the upper lobby were soughl ; many who prang b-om them perished by : th lid many were seen with gan ts oil ! e as they dcsi enth i and died soon after v aids from tin ! . \ ounds ; few v ho were saved by this means escaped entirelv un hurt rut : - themidsl of terrors which roust d the -' v hm -- of human nature to its utmost ' strength tin re wen display s of love in death | whi h m tkt i the h an blei d with pi v j fathers w re . in rushing back into the i names to save their children ; mothers wen . calling it frenzied lone for tin ir dan diters and were with difficulty dragged from the building husbands and \ h r fused to i have each other and met death together even friends ios1 life in endeavoring to save those under their care george smith the governor of virginia had brought with him to the theatre a young lady und ir iti j proti â€¢ tion separated from her in the j crowd lie had reached a place of safi ty but instantly turning back himself and hi young ward both became victims of the fire benjamin botts a lawyer of great di tine tion and father of john m botts had gain ed the door but his wife was left bt hind he ha tciie'i to save her and thev perished : togi r seventy persons were the martyrs of this j horrible night besides those already named there perished abram venable the presid ail of the bank rii virginia and lieutenant gibbon who was d str.-yed in attempting to | save miss conyers richmond was shroud i tl in mourning hardly a family had cscap : ed the visit of the destroving ttmmi and many had lost several loved one and the stroke wns nol felt only al home it fell upon hearts far removed from the lmmedi ate ccm of the disaster on the 30th december intelligence of this calamity was communicati tl to the sen ate of the united states and on motion of i mr bradley a resolution was adopted thai ! the senators would wear crape on the i ft arm for a month on the same dav a siini j lax resolution was adopted by the llouse of representatives having been intn duccd in a short and feeling address by mr dawson of virginia many years passed before the impression of this event was erased in the state where . it occurred li will never be forgotten â€” j some who escaped yet survive to :â€¢ ii ofthe | scene the day after the fire the common ci'tie il of richmond passed an ordinance forbidding any public show or sp ct u â– . or any open dancing assembly for four months ' a monumental churi h has risen on the very spot where iie ill-fated theatre once stood and its monument bearing ti names of many victims ofthe night will recall i th ' visitor thoughts of death and the iiii be yond # i a fi 1 ) fa r â€” the b .-- you leave vou : children in your will tin more they â€¢ i ! ' have in twenty years afterwards wealth ; ini ri : ed should be an it â– ; i â– â€¢ to actii ; b â– â– .'â€¢' . f that il is an int ei ive to loth the ' ry mom v 1 al do - a man good is tluÂ»t which hi c ms himself a lead .-...,'â– fortune like ready made bri dies sr-b om t , â– tiie man " bo c tmi sin pi ' a _\ man died in the city a month since .. ho l , i his son money other personal property and a uection oi ran paintinjft theweekafter i lie came into possession the pic ures were i traded off at a fourth of their value tc a ' g i man who deals in i laret and h ck - ) the fal h r wa a â– â– nnoi - in fine .. â€¢ i whi his aw as a c mm liessc-ur only i brandy t ; id three min â– horses rn all prob : 'â€¢ ' â– .â– e svil ;' : [ t pn . : : v of : : - â– " ; . aage : dm i to two .-,;:. â– o a l ck tie with his soul i in i .â– â– din .- nhqt !; ; - father li i hi i oul in -â– â– - â– -â– at ve said bef ire the t it iy mon y ! that does us good ia the money we earn the georgia bill the following article which we take from the baltimore sun gives such a clear under standing ofthe georgia bill that we think no apology is due for the space it occupies j tue georgia reconstbuctios muddle nothing eould more clearly show the ab surdities and inconsistencies of the recon , struction legislation of congress than the i vexed question of georgia that matter i would appear however as far as the senate is concerned to be approaching a solution mr pomerov's substitute noticed vesterdav for the latest bill concerning georgia as it came from the house and which wasadop j ted in'the senate by sixteen majority is as follows wherkas great irregularities have been i practiced in the organization of the legisla ture in the state of georgia both in its first organization and in the expulsion of certain members as well also as in it reorganiza tion since the act of december last ; there ' fi ire bt it resolved c tha the cxistinggov crnment in the state of georgia is hereby declared to be provisional and the same shall continue subject to the acts ofcongress of march 3 1867 march 23 1867 and july i 19 1867 until the admission of said state by law to representation in congress and for this purpose the stab of georgia shall constitute the third military district see 0 and bt it further enacted that in accordance with the pro isions of i nd undi r the powers and !< gi dation pro 1 ided in said acts an election shall be in id in said si on the first tuesday in september ! v to â– '. - all tin member ofthe general assi mbly of aid state provided for in tin constitution oi said stale adopted b its conventii â– march 11 1868 and said general assembly so elected shall assemble at the capitol of said state on november 23.1870 and or ganize preparatory to the admission of the state te ;-. presentation in congress and the p iwers and functions "!' the membi rs ofthe existing general assembly hall tea â€¢ and di termine on tit said november 1370 after ih â– adoption cfthe substitute bill it was amended by the addition of a section i authorizing the presitlcnt to suppress domes tic violence in an state thai cannot be sup j pn â€” d by the lo al authorities by employ ing the military t'.ircv of the united stati . or the militia of any state and a tho izin . the presidenl to exerci e the same power as in case of invasion this vn adopted â€” \ â€¢ yeas 32 nays 26 another atnendinenl r - i pealing certain laws so as to j rmil tin ganization and calling into service of the tei itia of thi state of georgia was agreed io by a party \ ote the irregularities referred to in the pre ' amble a - practici d in the organization ofthe new patent georgia legislature refers pro bably to the fai t as stated in mx.trumbuii :-!' â– h that nine members were not elected al all to their places but go1 ; it by having the next largest number of votes to candi 1 dates wi were aft rwards declar d i tligi ble bul whose ineligibility was not known or thought â€¢ ;" al he time of voting one met ib .â– e'n el was entrapded into sigi ' ig a petition to be released from his political dis abiliti , by being made to believe that 1 was i ,! ring under disabilities when he re ally s i not and then on his petition was ousted from his seal gen bullock and his confed rates in office have desired < ongri - no only t.i admit the site to the union once more with a legislature thus constitu ted bul to at them in tin ir offices for two y cars b i y nnd the time br â€¢ . hich they v elect d this modest proposition it was tin objeel of what was called the bingham a meudment which was ad tptedin tht house : o prevent â€” thai amendm tit providing that not hing in the bill - hould be construed to prevent the election of state officers or of lui d states senators under an eh ction t be ordered by the present legislature if th 1 1 irpose of bullock could have been ac complished there was nothing to prevenl congress keeping him an i hi associates in office for an unlimited time the question op ned a w ide field of di : t i'i both i hi ii â€¢;:-" and senate the friends of bullock in both houst - conjuring np a prodigious num ber of outrages io frighten loyal men from titer propriety and thereby facilitate the passagi of the bill in tie shape which they de led absurd as has been the whole matter of as aiming to bring a st ate int > the \ ii â€¢ and tii n put hcroul again or al least tr il her as ii she were out ii i creditable to the independence i ud manliness of u.-ii leading republican senators as ale â– -â– . trumb schurz edmund and others that t vigorously resisted this transparent political swindle in the interest of i iii â– k and hi adherents and exposed the hollowness of i the pretences under which it was urgi d - i mr schurz was forcible and happi in his : reply to r ; .-: ttor dial am i morton and horn ' 1 a ch arc in â€¢: â– :â– .' into t it true prin . , cipli s of con .; : - ui ional :.'â– ' rni nt i intn some of thost to the m . nei i Â» â– â– a i ',, aid with gr ai truth : ihey the i p ople of the south ' hai e '< om i i . i uch accustomed t â– h ok to < 'â€¢:: . ess foi protec-ti n ; ii ey canni t alwa * remain ou ; wards mr schurz read a let :â– â– - fn m '- â– â– rgi â€¢ to : : ,.- eff ci tha although ii was i i tie thai . il ired people w ere â– â€¢: tei i.'.ti : ted it was untrue t lial any di ally tow ird ii _ r t rnn ent e uicd and thai if < o eruor bullock's p irl . on tinu d in offic th v i de busi ie prosper | ty â€¢ : the state would 1 pros rati d and thai tii people of 1 jeorgia were not regarding thi i bingham amendment in any partisan light but as ; fleeting their business intcresl â– . the ' uecl of the ib itute of m r pome i roy if adopt i by the house will be to re ;â€¢â– â– :. : ieorgi tn military goa t n ment as ' direct . b thethreeri onstruction acts re ferred to in the firsl resolution until her i : e i ron to represental ';â€¢â€¢!-. in ( iongress,and in a cordance with the legislation of those acts an election to be held for m mbers of th state legislature on the first tuesdayin s : temb r next the legi dature to assemble on november 23 and organize preparaton 'â– id dssion an i th p iwers and func of tl ;â– :â€¢â€¢- nt li .' lature to end on thai i .:. hot ": i he bin ham imendment is nol fori i ly i a i d â€¢â€¢ : ' ; ! . i'i â– ' â– di fi â€¢ i the ol i : : of the bi w hich v as to contini th presi ; i reorgia office :, i.i rs in offii â– ; wo ear i . - m :[;-â– j time for which they were elected it is ot i surprising therefore that the announcement j of the result was received aa is stated by the friends of bullock in silence and that the washington chronicle which for the lirst time fails to appreciate military gov ernment deplores the action of the senate as unwise and unfortunate the country i will no doubt recret that reconstructs n so j continually requires to be reeonstructed.ar.d j as it is desirable to see georgia enter in the i phi n > if she is out : though perhaps if she | is to be brought in subject to such condi tions as gov bullock dictates her condition would be in ore tolerable under military rule which is substantially her state ar present the substitute seems to hare received the vote ot ihe conservative republicans and i democrats of the senate though what will j be its fate in the house remains to b - from the success et the bingham amend ment in that bod it i to be hoped a ma jority will siill be found opt â€¢-â– d to the aa pacious and ruinous projects wliich it was the object of that amendment to defeat tiie hanging gardens cf baby l in the great babylonian kin nebuchad nezzar i died b c 561 when be had com pl ted iii conquest as he found himself in possession of treasures uncounted and cap tives by ti ns of thousands determined a to signalize his reign by some ofthe tri umphs of peace he built a new palace of collossal dimensions,and surrounded ithv ith a ti iple w di the out r on of which v i seven miles in circuit he enclosed the ci of babylon w ith a wall which hi i says was uboul three hundn i and tl : ty live feet high and n hanging gar dens thi i.t | work was undertaken to gratify his w ife amyitis a median prin --. hai ing pass â– '. : â– r â– mn jer day - iti u tainous region â€¢ di diki â€¢! the unifi â€¢ i ofthe country about babylon and pined for the woods and hills of mi dia i hi lof ty r."k and various street ol this w ier ful paradise were an attempl to h ban scenery these gardens wen i.i^h enough to overlook the walls of the city and occupied a square four hui dn i feet on :: side it ha been a qui stion how thi -> gardi i j were supported at this greal height as ii v ii -. until lately taken for granti d thai babylonians did not understand the prii .' ofthe arch v il i me known tl il very porfeel arch wire built in egypt in v --_ ria and : t ! 'â– â– â– ,':â– nebuchadnezzar's time and so cb quest i .. i simp'.it'ied i thi ancient romans when they had to can \ a st : â€¢ aqnt li n .. . â€” a dei :â€¢ â– â– .- . . wn timi - buil thn e or four tiers â€¢ on above another till thi a uin d level at ' ' it the water was to be carried was reached in the tune manner only on a larger scale was this mo md the ga .;â€¢- i they built one story of archi ov t rina the tuquin i space : and thu wassto ... after story raised a great mass of earth covered the top and water was supplied from the euphrati s through pipe not on ly flowers and limbs gr wilier but trees of tlie largesl size some of them so large tha their trunks according to qtiintus ( nr : ... n < re twelve fet i in diami ter i hi a â– :.; to tin gard is was by steps and on thi way up t .; the arch -. ... tateh apa â– "â– â€¢ nt ;, â€¢â€¢. ii â– â€¢ pb asant c tlm - tin hi at of the cliniati t ould littii afiect honor tho tenacity with which men cling whal they term their honor is often ludi crously remarkabh . u i.i th cour pursue iu busines . are a it were but ci n tinui i departun - from the path ol probity . and ',. bile thi ir habit givi > â– -, iden > of*a '.'' â€¢ ni ss .,;' al moral . and in utter ' onti mpl oi all he i stabli hi d princi ples of proper deportment they will rani â– ;' honor as though indeed ihey pos esscd some notion of its definition take the ver iest miscreant to b found and challenge him i on this point a flush of indignation rush es to his cheek and he is ready to sacrii his existence in token of his devotion to it ; though at the same time his practices evince thai thi impulses of his bosom from the re moti -; poinl of il â– it fluence 1 he epil :â– â€¢ i . h n a i ording to its proper ai ceptii ::. : b:e to the char acters of but vei few i ecd we to sustain and illustrate ihi projx il ion d t end t the dregs of society or group in tin olisc trity t :' what haughty aristoc ib the mid he clas . there are thi u and whose con â€¢ i â– â– "'â€¢:â– â– â€¢â€¢'! with a consciousness of wealth l ads ' hi in to imagine themsi i.i - the \ â€¢ -' â– â€¢" â– 'â– of p.r ctioi d their names the watchword ofintegrity â– :â€¢:.; rh when an application of i !.â– i andard of i tii i and justice would show thai their pro per sphere would be with thi p â– p ..â€¢. de - â€¢â– '!. !â€¢ v â– mid be impi -''â– 'â– to consider this subjei t in all its b ran i - i - c an here c ned t â– : bcrefori for thi to ki w w hai '.'. c consider true honor that lox '! lition is â€¢ tnoi . ai d ii principle 1 i that the . i an a-t"t r :: . 1 )â– -â– â€¢â€¢.â– t.v v chemis try.â€”mr thi phileladi '...-'/. bwi kofski on â– 'â€¢:' the eleven : j lj i : - â– .' i . i big has jusi mad .â€¢_. mdi d ive hi ii try viz ; the soli iou and el hi rs it i but ni ... to pour into a (}. impagne glass a â€¢ t rtain quantity nf ii two ethers to produce alum instantaneous ly tin rn magnificent â– â€¢. nes ; i ombincd ; with e ery pure oxide of iron the a ; ous ether produces ruby ; with sulphati coppt r the sapphire with a < f maga i't -)-. tie ami th -; : with salts of nickel the emerald with salts of chrome the sotici ous eiii r p iduc a the i : :.' n nl colorai . ofthe topaz these ethers evapoi ue with â– a penetrative perfume which -; vera pei have declared to be very agrei ible the i saits crysta'iize very regularly as sooa as the liquid parts has gone the corindohs ob : tained through this means are not quite i hard as the natural ones bul if tht opera ti . is carefully done the brilliancy is ad miral . -. th ilica and .- .- arc princi pl - â€¢ :. ily found in th d:si i parts . 1.1 â€¢ â– â€¢â– '! til - ie 'â– â€¢ : ' :' - ' â€¢ , n i ers t hough . : costs ver litth i iiii ti ovi â€¢â€¢;. v i bring lb h a n v â€¢'..;â– i nol only in tht jewelry but in :... â– : our ' t indu ttrial arts

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flip ivi it r m cgt v \ mr 4 j t>l v salisbury ntc7mai~liri870 - xr 10 1870 l?Â»to at ure hopes for â€¢ arlotte x c i rsult op ax establish i â€¢â– ' 'â– â– -..â€¢.._-. ther -.\ ith a creasing capital gives ns i . 'â– â– â– r facilities to offer greater t â– r i'li'tfliiii b.-.tb whole il i i hi 'â€¢â€¢â€¢ thi - m itice is wor ' ' . â€¢â– i â– ; n of all we are â– â€¢â– â– ' e purchases hich ow icrease r b iness â– - '. â– ' 27 â€¢-â– '.'. a ' â– , to buy mtity ' : â€¢ icturers 1 .,â– â– â– -â– â– dou ii cent i ..' â€¢ it gives â€¢ the li a c * :: stock â€¢ " bv theloth i - i classes of ; â€¢ â– vholesal ' â– â€¢ ' ch we in i e , irket to pur e on their u ay ; â– other -' â€¢ â– : will be â– ast viz : . .' i Â«' imretn i â€¢:; . - i 'â€¢' â– isitk in goods deparlment g department â– â– ' ; '.. :â– â€¢â– the most 1 c.j v liliubj e cl'.im t hats | "â– 'â– ''â€¢â– klvn a ucti i - â– lldi v . .. . , . , â– ' â– â€¢ â€¢ ' .'â€¢ rv v â– â– 1 u v â€¢ â– â– i . , , -Â» , -, j n e ilicr ; ; .': â– i ? \ ' . .' ,â™¦ * â€¢ ' city i ' a - iyy npnarfmf ' ! ... - â€” i ~* ._..- ivall .-',-â€¢ â– ,â– :â– !. \ i'sy \ '.:.'â– â€¢â– "- is wi k-ly . i â– ' 1iixtels . .:!.â€¢ . : ;:. n c . copii - i one address 1 2 5(1 1 iu c.'.mie to headdress m.00 j liatc-i ot advertittsvnq . â€” ones piare ! ; rs insertion si ob i or each additi ual insertion i Â» special notices will be charged a per rent '.' â€¢ er than the abo e r.ii courl and justice's < rders will be publish ed al the same rates with other advertise in en t s . obituary notices over six lines charged asad ertist m tits con rract rates space Â§ t gj s .".' . [ i i 1 square u 50 ; 00 45.00 i 18 00 2-1 00 30 uti 5 00 75.00 ' ( u 28 00 10 00 50 00 80 00 130,00 : rhe old south state yadkin college x ('.. i \ may 4th 1870 \ d r li if â– 'â– : may you bt pleased to allow me ::. ;. t ur t olumns a shoi ; sp ice iu order 'â€¢ " give you a s nop is or rather the hii i of 1 he ren interesting and highly en ; ti rtainhig singing school (' lebration which came i fat muddy creek church on the 30th i our correspondent having secured a ia invil tion to attend had endeavored to make even arrangement accordingly but : â– doi imed t tli ppoini nn nt ! when 'â– â– i tit taii ing poinl for thai pla c was no ! ' i to 1 ravel in an opp itt dircctii a '. â€” j â– â€¢ i ' â– â– it ine sin i uccecdcd in get â– ' i to gath â€¢ ! in general news in : * â€¢ \ " ! - according to the occasion a mani ition ol i - int rii â€¢. 1 '< ir st ime nt ipular ' â– â€¢ ; of tin state i i i'i tlien :'â– ire al i tvo r â€¢ i -.. and i he 'â€¢< lid xorl li ; ' i â€¢;â€¢ ' - most merit orii iu â€¢ fiy-t jt -' n's itself so wi â– â– trust ing mr e lit . â€¢;â– . to ;â– ur gi i rosit for niueli and to \ onr for i irance tor more fn n 30 unl i 9.30 continuous crowds of men women and chil drcn were - â€¢ n hocking l i the church each i vi ing with the other in â€¢ â– '. incing the di ci inter the exerc.i es were inangura !â€¢'! b an ad iress by mr eiii â€¢ of da ie ( o ' d rep : d to have 1 teen an alee euri '! ' 'â– â– [ uen 1 i libit at the close of i . â– ellis ri mai ks o lu rs were e db 1 ; > the . ! i was v e uns ill : ie i â– v ia f of yadkii \ i lage who i c i tit space of thirty live mint ites n on or less tin re he ood i niinutive 1 â– . ling a iapo 1 : :â€¢ form p . : in - inn etry a hand d the pres nee of brain a conn bespt ike i rare intc ligence ' i ' said t let he ap]Â»eared to all v hai he re | â– natural oral or â€” vs i h a voi -â– of re â– -â€¢ r a . d â– â– npa -. the first toni * of ; '"â– ed to iii the tl dred emotions â– ;. lb adopti tl the style which is triy hi o n i rse md forcible as ian j .. ag c ii be ma le a d ' : \ e y quick ener i . : i id and impres dve li r oi â€¢ of his age 1 i i â– .â– lit ul i.i ir nice bo ish tone . ir distil t thrilling ul teranc ; ni grace i : . ' : m bold expressions unparalleh d en and manly -â– . r n *>, h ri etted the atten of 1 te entire aud ence who seemed un , to lo it ingle -â€¢ i lable falling thus .' :â€¢â€¢ : 1 1 ivoni such youthful lips â€” expressions i . . ! â€¢ i along upon the tide of his imp mi !-! â– â– '.- ;. ."' etc : my reporter says he lefl the gay ami joy ous si â€¢ ne al a late hour minus appetite and h-at fet ling only a d ttenn 3 nation to bask a - â€¢ ' : '" the smiies of a certain fair one and proffering her the opportunity sun>inon n posse ofthe ci izens : i se are order and who have nt gle ted their duty and that is all the effi cacy of the militia after they get there bat sir supposi they are efficacious what are they to do you say arrest some of thes violators of law suppose you can find one and you arrest him what will vou do i with him put him in prison why sir the prison would be broken open just as soon as thai militia force turn its back upon the house bui suppose you retain him iu pris . - â€” t^^^^aa^abaaum aa on do not he and his friends know that there are nine chances tjf one that some of his confederates will be on the grand jurv ami no true bill found but suppose a true bill is found as the re sult of your militia operation against one of these offenders i am informed it has trans pired in our state that when one of these men was upon trial before a petit jury it was found that in the endorsement on the bill of a true bill the word t % t jfc had been prefix ed bv-aqpsebody tso th^p lead not a true bill and they were tryirg a man upon no bill at all i simply state this to show the subterfuges that are resorted to to evade the law but sir if you bring that offender before a petit jury you are bringing him before a petit jury composed of some men who have sworn in the most solemn manner and are bound by the most horrid obligations one to the other to acquit him i cannot see how the militia under the circumstances would be a remedy at all ******** * the addition which the senator from mis souri proposes to make to existing laws on this subject is to allow the president in in surrectionary localities to suspend the habeas corpus and declare martial law another feature is that he allow the levying of con tributions upon the citizen of that locality to pay the expenses of the operation i have already said that when the state sent the militia there they would but be a posse of the sherill and i say now under existing laws if you send the existing force ofthe united states there when they arrive in the county they are but a pone of the sheriff if they arresl a man what will they do with him ': they must turn lrm over to the civil authority but sir the people of those communities have learned by experience to respect the strong arm of the government ofthe united states and they have leaned to know that martial law declared is something that can not be succesfully and safely evaded for it is evasion not resistance that is the founda tion ofthe hopes of those men whoarecrea ! ting these disturbances the efficacy of the . proposed law consists in the feature that the writ of habeas corpus may lie suspended and that when the military authorities make ar rests they shall not be compelled to turn the offender over to the civil authorities to be tried by a jury of his own confederates i ; would not aii iw tin president to suspend the i writ of halms copus in a whole state i j would confine it as the sen tor from missou ri dots to the insurrectionary locality i do not know that any i of the union has 'â– . been violated in tlie state ofk,,rth carolina bv ,!, s men ' frantic with fear passed over the heads of i i before them in their wav towards the doors or windows ofthe thea'tre tlie win dows even of the upper lobby were soughl ; many who prang b-om them perished by : th lid many were seen with gan ts oil ! e as they dcsi enth i and died soon after v aids from tin ! . \ ounds ; few v ho were saved by this means escaped entirelv un hurt rut : - themidsl of terrors which roust d the -' v hm -- of human nature to its utmost ' strength tin re wen display s of love in death | whi h m tkt i the h an blei d with pi v j fathers w re . in rushing back into the i names to save their children ; mothers wen . calling it frenzied lone for tin ir dan diters and were with difficulty dragged from the building husbands and \ h r fused to i have each other and met death together even friends ios1 life in endeavoring to save those under their care george smith the governor of virginia had brought with him to the theatre a young lady und ir iti j proti â€¢ tion separated from her in the j crowd lie had reached a place of safi ty but instantly turning back himself and hi young ward both became victims of the fire benjamin botts a lawyer of great di tine tion and father of john m botts had gain ed the door but his wife was left bt hind he ha tciie'i to save her and thev perished : togi r seventy persons were the martyrs of this j horrible night besides those already named there perished abram venable the presid ail of the bank rii virginia and lieutenant gibbon who was d str.-yed in attempting to | save miss conyers richmond was shroud i tl in mourning hardly a family had cscap : ed the visit of the destroving ttmmi and many had lost several loved one and the stroke wns nol felt only al home it fell upon hearts far removed from the lmmedi ate ccm of the disaster on the 30th december intelligence of this calamity was communicati tl to the sen ate of the united states and on motion of i mr bradley a resolution was adopted thai ! the senators would wear crape on the i ft arm for a month on the same dav a siini j lax resolution was adopted by the llouse of representatives having been intn duccd in a short and feeling address by mr dawson of virginia many years passed before the impression of this event was erased in the state where . it occurred li will never be forgotten â€” j some who escaped yet survive to :â€¢ ii ofthe | scene the day after the fire the common ci'tie il of richmond passed an ordinance forbidding any public show or sp ct u â– . or any open dancing assembly for four months ' a monumental churi h has risen on the very spot where iie ill-fated theatre once stood and its monument bearing ti names of many victims ofthe night will recall i th ' visitor thoughts of death and the iiii be yond # i a fi 1 ) fa r â€” the b .-- you leave vou : children in your will tin more they â€¢ i ! ' have in twenty years afterwards wealth ; ini ri : ed should be an it â– ; i â– â€¢ to actii ; b â– â– .'â€¢' . f that il is an int ei ive to loth the ' ry mom v 1 al do - a man good is tluÂ»t which hi c ms himself a lead .-...,'â– fortune like ready made bri dies sr-b om t , â– tiie man " bo c tmi sin pi ' a _\ man died in the city a month since .. ho l , i his son money other personal property and a uection oi ran paintinjft theweekafter i lie came into possession the pic ures were i traded off at a fourth of their value tc a ' g i man who deals in i laret and h ck - ) the fal h r wa a â– â– nnoi - in fine .. â€¢ i whi his aw as a c mm liessc-ur only i brandy t ; id three min â– horses rn all prob : 'â€¢ ' â– .â– e svil ;' : [ t pn . : : v of : : - â– " ; . aage : dm i to two .-,;:. â– o a l ck tie with his soul i in i .â– â– din .- nhqt !; ; - father li i hi i oul in -â– â– - â– -â– at ve said bef ire the t it iy mon y ! that does us good ia the money we earn the georgia bill the following article which we take from the baltimore sun gives such a clear under standing ofthe georgia bill that we think no apology is due for the space it occupies j tue georgia reconstbuctios muddle nothing eould more clearly show the ab surdities and inconsistencies of the recon , struction legislation of congress than the i vexed question of georgia that matter i would appear however as far as the senate is concerned to be approaching a solution mr pomerov's substitute noticed vesterdav for the latest bill concerning georgia as it came from the house and which wasadop j ted in'the senate by sixteen majority is as follows wherkas great irregularities have been i practiced in the organization of the legisla ture in the state of georgia both in its first organization and in the expulsion of certain members as well also as in it reorganiza tion since the act of december last ; there ' fi ire bt it resolved c tha the cxistinggov crnment in the state of georgia is hereby declared to be provisional and the same shall continue subject to the acts ofcongress of march 3 1867 march 23 1867 and july i 19 1867 until the admission of said state by law to representation in congress and for this purpose the stab of georgia shall constitute the third military district see 0 and bt it further enacted that in accordance with the pro isions of i nd undi r the powers and !< gi dation pro 1 ided in said acts an election shall be in id in said si on the first tuesday in september ! v to â– '. - all tin member ofthe general assi mbly of aid state provided for in tin constitution oi said stale adopted b its conventii â– march 11 1868 and said general assembly so elected shall assemble at the capitol of said state on november 23.1870 and or ganize preparatory to the admission of the state te ;-. presentation in congress and the p iwers and functions "!' the membi rs ofthe existing general assembly hall tea â€¢ and di termine on tit said november 1370 after ih â– adoption cfthe substitute bill it was amended by the addition of a section i authorizing the presitlcnt to suppress domes tic violence in an state thai cannot be sup j pn â€” d by the lo al authorities by employ ing the military t'.ircv of the united stati . or the militia of any state and a tho izin . the presidenl to exerci e the same power as in case of invasion this vn adopted â€” \ â€¢ yeas 32 nays 26 another atnendinenl r - i pealing certain laws so as to j rmil tin ganization and calling into service of the tei itia of thi state of georgia was agreed io by a party \ ote the irregularities referred to in the pre ' amble a - practici d in the organization ofthe new patent georgia legislature refers pro bably to the fai t as stated in mx.trumbuii :-!' â– h that nine members were not elected al all to their places but go1 ; it by having the next largest number of votes to candi 1 dates wi were aft rwards declar d i tligi ble bul whose ineligibility was not known or thought â€¢ ;" al he time of voting one met ib .â– e'n el was entrapded into sigi ' ig a petition to be released from his political dis abiliti , by being made to believe that 1 was i ,! ring under disabilities when he re ally s i not and then on his petition was ousted from his seal gen bullock and his confed rates in office have desired < ongri - no only t.i admit the site to the union once more with a legislature thus constitu ted bul to at them in tin ir offices for two y cars b i y nnd the time br â€¢ . hich they v elect d this modest proposition it was tin objeel of what was called the bingham a meudment which was ad tptedin tht house : o prevent â€” thai amendm tit providing that not hing in the bill - hould be construed to prevent the election of state officers or of lui d states senators under an eh ction t be ordered by the present legislature if th 1 1 irpose of bullock could have been ac complished there was nothing to prevenl congress keeping him an i hi associates in office for an unlimited time the question op ned a w ide field of di : t i'i both i hi ii â€¢;:-" and senate the friends of bullock in both houst - conjuring np a prodigious num ber of outrages io frighten loyal men from titer propriety and thereby facilitate the passagi of the bill in tie shape which they de led absurd as has been the whole matter of as aiming to bring a st ate int > the \ ii â€¢ and tii n put hcroul again or al least tr il her as ii she were out ii i creditable to the independence i ud manliness of u.-ii leading republican senators as ale â– -â– . trumb schurz edmund and others that t vigorously resisted this transparent political swindle in the interest of i iii â– k and hi adherents and exposed the hollowness of i the pretences under which it was urgi d - i mr schurz was forcible and happi in his : reply to r ; .-: ttor dial am i morton and horn ' 1 a ch arc in â€¢: â– :â– .' into t it true prin . , cipli s of con .; : - ui ional :.'â– ' rni nt i intn some of thost to the m . nei i Â» â– â– a i ',, aid with gr ai truth : ihey the i p ople of the south ' hai e '< om i i . i uch accustomed t â– h ok to < 'â€¢:: . ess foi protec-ti n ; ii ey canni t alwa * remain ou ; wards mr schurz read a let :â– â– - fn m '- â– â– rgi â€¢ to : : ,.- eff ci tha although ii was i i tie thai . il ired people w ere â– â€¢: tei i.'.ti : ted it was untrue t lial any di ally tow ird ii _ r t rnn ent e uicd and thai if < o eruor bullock's p irl . on tinu d in offic th v i de busi ie prosper | ty â€¢ : the state would 1 pros rati d and thai tii people of 1 jeorgia were not regarding thi i bingham amendment in any partisan light but as ; fleeting their business intcresl â– . the ' uecl of the ib itute of m r pome i roy if adopt i by the house will be to re ;â€¢â– â– :. : ieorgi tn military goa t n ment as ' direct . b thethreeri onstruction acts re ferred to in the firsl resolution until her i : e i ron to represental ';â€¢â€¢!-. in ( iongress,and in a cordance with the legislation of those acts an election to be held for m mbers of th state legislature on the first tuesdayin s : temb r next the legi dature to assemble on november 23 and organize preparaton 'â– id dssion an i th p iwers and func of tl ;â– :â€¢â€¢- nt li .' lature to end on thai i .:. hot ": i he bin ham imendment is nol fori i ly i a i d â€¢â€¢ : ' ; ! . i'i â– ' â– di fi â€¢ i the ol i : : of the bi w hich v as to contini th presi ; i reorgia office :, i.i rs in offii â– ; wo ear i . - m :[;-â– j time for which they were elected it is ot i surprising therefore that the announcement j of the result was received aa is stated by the friends of bullock in silence and that the washington chronicle which for the lirst time fails to appreciate military gov ernment deplores the action of the senate as unwise and unfortunate the country i will no doubt recret that reconstructs n so j continually requires to be reeonstructed.ar.d j as it is desirable to see georgia enter in the i phi n > if she is out : though perhaps if she | is to be brought in subject to such condi tions as gov bullock dictates her condition would be in ore tolerable under military rule which is substantially her state ar present the substitute seems to hare received the vote ot ihe conservative republicans and i democrats of the senate though what will j be its fate in the house remains to b - from the success et the bingham amend ment in that bod it i to be hoped a ma jority will siill be found opt â€¢-â– d to the aa pacious and ruinous projects wliich it was the object of that amendment to defeat tiie hanging gardens cf baby l in the great babylonian kin nebuchad nezzar i died b c 561 when be had com pl ted iii conquest as he found himself in possession of treasures uncounted and cap tives by ti ns of thousands determined a to signalize his reign by some ofthe tri umphs of peace he built a new palace of collossal dimensions,and surrounded ithv ith a ti iple w di the out r on of which v i seven miles in circuit he enclosed the ci of babylon w ith a wall which hi i says was uboul three hundn i and tl : ty live feet high and n hanging gar dens thi i.t | work was undertaken to gratify his w ife amyitis a median prin --. hai ing pass â– '. : â– r â– mn jer day - iti u tainous region â€¢ di diki â€¢! the unifi â€¢ i ofthe country about babylon and pined for the woods and hills of mi dia i hi lof ty r."k and various street ol this w ier ful paradise were an attempl to h ban scenery these gardens wen i.i^h enough to overlook the walls of the city and occupied a square four hui dn i feet on :: side it ha been a qui stion how thi -> gardi i j were supported at this greal height as ii v ii -. until lately taken for granti d thai babylonians did not understand the prii .' ofthe arch v il i me known tl il very porfeel arch wire built in egypt in v --_ ria and : t ! 'â– â– â– ,':â– nebuchadnezzar's time and so cb quest i .. i simp'.it'ied i thi ancient romans when they had to can \ a st : â€¢ aqnt li n .. . â€” a dei :â€¢ â– â– .- . . wn timi - buil thn e or four tiers â€¢ on above another till thi a uin d level at ' ' it the water was to be carried was reached in the tune manner only on a larger scale was this mo md the ga .;â€¢- i they built one story of archi ov t rina the tuquin i space : and thu wassto ... after story raised a great mass of earth covered the top and water was supplied from the euphrati s through pipe not on ly flowers and limbs gr wilier but trees of tlie largesl size some of them so large tha their trunks according to qtiintus ( nr : ... n < re twelve fet i in diami ter i hi a â– :.; to tin gard is was by steps and on thi way up t .; the arch -. ... tateh apa â– "â– â€¢ nt ;, â€¢â€¢. ii â– â€¢ pb asant c tlm - tin hi at of the cliniati t ould littii afiect honor tho tenacity with which men cling whal they term their honor is often ludi crously remarkabh . u i.i th cour pursue iu busines . are a it were but ci n tinui i departun - from the path ol probity . and ',. bile thi ir habit givi > â– -, iden > of*a '.'' â€¢ ni ss .,;' al moral . and in utter ' onti mpl oi all he i stabli hi d princi ples of proper deportment they will rani â– ;' honor as though indeed ihey pos esscd some notion of its definition take the ver iest miscreant to b found and challenge him i on this point a flush of indignation rush es to his cheek and he is ready to sacrii his existence in token of his devotion to it ; though at the same time his practices evince thai thi impulses of his bosom from the re moti -; poinl of il â– it fluence 1 he epil :â– â€¢ i . h n a i ording to its proper ai ceptii ::. : b:e to the char acters of but vei few i ecd we to sustain and illustrate ihi projx il ion d t end t the dregs of society or group in tin olisc trity t :' what haughty aristoc ib the mid he clas . there are thi u and whose con â€¢ i â– â– "'â€¢:â– â– â€¢â€¢'! with a consciousness of wealth l ads ' hi in to imagine themsi i.i - the \ â€¢ -' â– â€¢" â– 'â– of p.r ctioi d their names the watchword ofintegrity â– :â€¢:.; rh when an application of i !.â– i andard of i tii i and justice would show thai their pro per sphere would be with thi p â– p ..â€¢. de - â€¢â– '!. !â€¢ v â– mid be impi -''â– 'â– to consider this subjei t in all its b ran i - i - c an here c ned t â– : bcrefori for thi to ki w w hai '.'. c consider true honor that lox '! lition is â€¢ tnoi . ai d ii principle 1 i that the . i an a-t"t r :: . 1 )â– -â– â€¢â€¢.â– t.v v chemis try.â€”mr thi phileladi '...-'/. bwi kofski on â– 'â€¢:' the eleven : j lj i : - â– .' i . i big has jusi mad .â€¢_. mdi d ive hi ii try viz ; the soli iou and el hi rs it i but ni ... to pour into a (}. impagne glass a â€¢ t rtain quantity nf ii two ethers to produce alum instantaneous ly tin rn magnificent â– â€¢. nes ; i ombincd ; with e ery pure oxide of iron the a ; ous ether produces ruby ; with sulphati coppt r the sapphire with a < f maga i't -)-. tie ami th -; : with salts of nickel the emerald with salts of chrome the sotici ous eiii r p iduc a the i : :.' n nl colorai . ofthe topaz these ethers evapoi ue with â– a penetrative perfume which -; vera pei have declared to be very agrei ible the i saits crysta'iize very regularly as sooa as the liquid parts has gone the corindohs ob : tained through this means are not quite i hard as the natural ones bul if tht opera ti . is carefully done the brilliancy is ad miral . -. th ilica and .- .- arc princi pl - â€¢ :. ily found in th d:si i parts . 1.1 â€¢ â– â€¢â– '! til - ie 'â– â€¢ : ' :' - ' â€¢ , n i ers t hough . : costs ver litth i iiii ti ovi â€¢â€¢;. v i bring lb h a n v â€¢'..;â– i nol only in tht jewelry but in :... â– : our ' t indu ttrial arts